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200 sheets of standard printer paper make 1"
Carbon paper was once commonly used to make copies of handwritten or typed documents. It was placed between two sheets of paper, and pressure from writing or typing on the top sheet would transfer the carbon image onto the bottom sheet.
About 1/25 of a tree is used to make 27 sheets of paper.
500 sheets
A little more than one third of a tree is needed to make 3,000 sheets of copy paper
'Carbon Paper' .
I wish i knew....
Carbon paper was used inbetween sheets of paper to make duplicates either by typing on them or writing on them. The pressure of pressing on it deposited carbon on the sheets below creating the duplicates.
you would need hard paper, pencil, glue,scissors,paper cutter.cellophane sheets, blue and red. 1. chart paper would also do, but you would need two layers of chart paper to make the spectacle frame. 2. on the chart paper you would need to draw any kind of spectacle, because the shape depends on you, and make that 2 exact layers, 3.now you will need scissors to form the shape for your cellophane sheets. 4.paste the cellophane sheets in between the two layers of chart paper, but do not forget that the red cellophane sheet should be to your left(left eye) and the blue to your right. 5.when you are choosing the cellophane sheets, make sure you get the right kind of colour, red should be sweet red and the blue should be like ocean blue, but make sure they are not too dark or thick. MarDonald DELLTECH
Trees make paper when they are cut down and processed into sheets. This process involves bleaching the wooden sheets white.
To make papyrus paper the inner pith of the stem is cut lengthways into strips and soaked in water. The strips are then placed side by side with a second layer placed at right angles to the first. The two layers are then beaten with a mallet to break down the fibers and bond the strips together. The sheets are left to dry under weights for several days. The dried sheets are polished with a flat stone to make them smooth and ready for use.\
Assuming the paper is 0.1 mm thick, it would take 1000 sheets to make a 100 mm (1 cm) stack. To calculate how many times this stack would wrap around the Earth's circumference of about 40,075 km, divide 40,075,000 m by 0.1 m (the combined thickness of all 1000 sheets), which gives 400,750,000. So you would need 400,750,000 sheets of paper to wrap around the Earth once.